Slough Heat & Power

From WikiWaste


Slough Heat & Power
Operational
Site Location
Site Location

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Operator Slough Heat and Power Ltd (SSE)
Capacity 21 MWe
Feedstock Waste Wood
EPR (Waste Licence) CP3031SX
ROC Yes
CfD
CHP Yes

Operators Annual Report


Input Data

Year Wood Litter RDF Other Total


Output Data

Year IBA IBA %ge of Tot IN APC APC %ge of Tot IN

Slough Heat and Power Plant
Slough Heat and Power Plant


Summary

A Biomass Waste Combined Heat and Power(CHP) EFW facility located in Slough, Berkshire which supplies 80 MWe to the National Grid and heat to local sources and has an annual fuel tonnage requirement of over 150,000 tonnes per annum[1]. The facility is a 'multifuel' site using a variety of Municipal Solid Waste. Commercial and Industrial Waste and Wood Waste as its fuel sources[2].

In 2008 Scottish and Southern Energy (SSE) acquired Slough Heat and Power (SH&P) from SERGO for £49.25m[3].

The plant was converted to renewable fuel in c.2001 at a cost of approximately £30m[4] and this led to the development of an innovative, integrated supply chain for secure fuel supply in partnership with local suppliers such as Thames Valley Energy, a not-for-profit renewable energy agency[4].

The plant supplies all of the business located on the same trading estate as SH&P with heat, electricity and hot water. Over 2000 nearby homes are also supplied with their electricity from the plant via 100 km of underground cable as part of a private electricity network[4].

Plant

The six boilers and turbines at the SH&P energy centre can operate on a wide variety of fuels, ranging from renewable sources such as wood and fibre through to natural gas, coal and distillate. A small amount of natural gas and coal is used to control the boilers. As part of the plant, steam from two wood-fired fluidized bed boilers is directed to a 35 MW pass out steam turbine. A new multi-fuelled vibrating grate boiler dedicated to burning Fibre Fuel and wood chip, was commissioned based on a contract under the 4th Non-Fossil Fuel Obligation scheme[4].

References